Predicting Conditional Expectations For Path-Dependent Events Using TDBP-Learning

Author(s):  
Daniel Alexandre Bloch ◽  
Arthur Böök
2019 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Alfano

Abstract Reasoning is the iterative, path-dependent process of asking questions and answering them. Moral reasoning is a species of such reasoning, so it is a matter of asking and answering moral questions, which requires both creativity and curiosity. As such, interventions and practices that help people ask more and better moral questions promise to improve moral reasoning.


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcellino Gaudenzi ◽  
Antonino Zanette ◽  
Maria Antonietta Lepellere

Author(s):  
Randall G. Holcombe

Despite massive worldwide growth of government in the twentieth century, there have been periods in the U.S. and other countries when growth has slowed or reversed. Government growth is not inevitable. Explanations of government growth fall into three major categories. Path-dependent theories emphasize factors that continually push the size of government up, so the current size is in part a function of its past size. Theories about the equilibrium size of government explain why government is big, but not why government grows. If equilibrium conditions change, that can produce government growth. Theories also describe ideological shifts that cause people to want, or at least accept, bigger governments. All these explanations could have an effect on government growth. However, none appears to be persuasive enough to explain all the growth that occurred.


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